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    The Importance Of HIPAA

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    I did not know what HIPAA is or what the acronym stood for. The Health Insurance Portability & Accountability Act of 1996 is more important than I thought. The intent of HIPAA is to provide a level security for health information. It also adds an administrative simplification by standardization of formats, codes and identifiers. HIPAA allows me to have control over my health care information which permits me the right to view my documents anytime I need to. The privacy rule affects the daily…

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    HIPAA Compliance

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    of much of the time utilized correspondence are not HIPAA agreeable. Unsecure channels of correspondence by and large incorporate SMS, Skype and email since duplicates of messages are left on administration suppliers' servers over which a social insurance association has no control. List of technology that works with HIPAA: -Any Secured Health Information (PHI) must be encoded all the time. -Every remedial expert approved to get access to and convey PHI must have a "one of a kind User…

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    Is patient privacy at risk when it comes to electronic medical records? The healthcare industry is constantly changing, specifically when it comes to the protection of patient information and patient privacy. All hospitals and institutions have strict regulations and policies on HIPAA. Medical records can include patient’s date of birth, social security numbers, and complete medical history from birth to death. Most employees must have usernames and passwords to access these records. Patients…

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    Healthcare facilities use a variety of methods to safeguard patient information from theft. Every facility implements the system that adapt to their necessities, they take into consideration that they have to protect the paper and electronic information. Some of the security measures that can be implemented are: 1. Increase administrative control: this step can be achieved by updating the security policies and procedures; training employees in privacy and security; and keep updated background…

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    Accountability And HIPAA

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    The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPPA) of 1996 has helped to revolutionize this country’s use of Patient Health Information (PHI) in many ways, but at the same time it has hindered the American health care system in implementing a national Health Information Exchange (HIE). Consequently, without a national HIE the problem of having a system that allows for continuous quality improvement in the quality of health care received by a patient and still protecting the right to…

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    HIPAA Compliance Report

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    Now that management has all the necessary tools at their disposal, they need to make a decision as to what best suits their organization’s needs. Regola and Chawla (2013) suggest that there needs to be a certain method to the approach of creating HIPAA compliant controls, which starts with Risk Analysis and Management, then flows to Administrative Safeguards, followed by Physical Safeguards, and finally Technical Safeguards (Regola & Chawla, 2013). To begin with, they suggest that a check needs…

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    Healthcare landing page SEO: HIPAA COMPLIANCE - 5 Page title: HIPAA Compliance Endpoint Security How Visibility, Control & Automated Response Helps Healthcare Organizations Compensate for BYOD and IoT security Gaps The rise in IoT, BYOD and mobile devices, has made network endpoints one of the most vulnerable security gaps in most networks. What makes the healthcare industry unique, is its need to secure information while maintaining the delicate balance between patient privacy and the need…

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    history and guidelines of The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act also known as Public Law 104-191, was enacted on August 21, 1996. When numerous complaints from patients arose about not being able to continue to pay premiums to the same insurance company when they changed employers, the US Congress passed a law. That law was known as the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act. HIPAA was also known as…

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    Why HIPAA Was Created

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    Primitively known as the Kennedy-Kassebaum Bill, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act is a set of regulations that became law in 1996: enacted by the United State Congress and signed into law by President Bill Clinton. “HIPAA is a set of health care regulations with a two-pronged purpose: help patients’ health insurance move with them, and streamline the transfer of medical records from one health care institution to another; create standard for managing medical records to…

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    HIPAA Case Study

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    Moodey saw John last week for his annual physical. Dr. Moodey sent John for some lab work as he was concerned that John may have developed diabetes mellitus. John asked the Medical Assistant, Sally, to contact him on his cell phone to discuss the results of the lab tests. When the results came in, Sally called John’s home phone and left a message for him to contact the office. Which of the Patients’ Bill of Rights afforded under Title II of HIPAA did Sally violate? | 15 points | Directions to…

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